The Week in Brief

Prevention Efforts Increasingly See Suicide Through a Broader Lens

If you or someone you know may be experiencing a mental health crisis, contact the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline by dialing or texting 鈥988.”


Someone in America dies by suicide every 11 minutes. It鈥檚 that common. But that doesn鈥檛 make it normal.

Humans have evolved over centuries to survive. So when people try to kill themselves, something has gone wrong. Typically, the assumption is that something happened in the person鈥檚 mind 鈥 a mental illness.

That鈥檚 led prevention efforts to typically focus on connecting people with treatment in moments of crisis.

But that鈥檚 changing. There鈥檚 a growing movement asking a different question: What went wrong in the world around that person?

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During the covid pandemic, rates of anxiety and depression spiked 鈥 not because everyone鈥檚 brain chemistry suddenly changed but because the world changed. People were out of work, isolated, struggling to make ends meet.

That led many people in the mental health advocacy world to call for a broader approach. Treatments and crisis care are vital, they say, but the goal of suicide prevention needs to expand beyond stopping people from dying to also聽giving聽them reasons to live.

Decades of research聽supports聽this idea. Interventions that improve people鈥檚 lives and prospects, such as running food banks to ensure families聽don鈥檛聽go hungry or hosting weekly book clubs for homebound seniors to make friends, can reduce suicide.

I spoke with Chris Pawelski, a fourth-generation farmer in Orange County, New York, for this story. He told me how his dad鈥檚 passing, caring for his mom with dementia, and the struggling finances of his family鈥檚 onion farm brought him to consider suicide.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all stuff collapsing down upon you,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 weeks, months, years of dealing with all sorts of pressures that you can鈥檛 alleviate.鈥

What helped him through that time was not just family support and therapy. It was also an economic plan. He worked with an organization called NY聽FarmNet, which provided a free financial consultant who helped Pawelski transition from farming onions for wholesale to a new model, growing varied produce to sell directly to consumers.

Today, Pawelski’s business has stabilized, and he and his wife are聽paying down聽debt. He聽advocates for聽programs to help others in similar situations.

That can mean crisis hotlines and access to affordable therapy, Pawelski said. But what he really wants are policy changes that help people address underlying hardships before a crisis strikes.

鈥淲e need to think broader and longer-term than a helpline,鈥 he said. That鈥檚 鈥渁 band-aid on a gunshot wound.鈥

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